Dravet syndrome has long represented one of the most challenging pediatric epilepsies encountered in neurology and genetic medicine. Caused primarily by loss‑of‑function variants in SCN1A, the disorder emerges in infancy with prolonged febrile seizures and evolves into a lifelong condition marked by treatment‑resistant epilepsy, developmental delay, and significant morbidity. As the gene and cell therapy community gathers for the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy (ASGCT) Annual Meeting, the field’s attention is turning toward approaches capable not only of reducing seizures but also of altering the developmental trajectory that defines the disorder. This year’s Presidential Symposium features new data on ETX101, an investigational gene regulation therapy from Encoded Therapeutics, that appears to move the needle on both fronts. Encoded Therapeutics, a clinical‑stage biotechnology company developing precision genetic medicines for severe neurological disorders, has engineered ETX101 as a one‑time AAV9‑based therapy designed to increase expression of SCN1A. Rather than replacing or editing the gene, ETX101 aims to restore physiologic sodium channel function in inhibitory interneurons. The company’s Phase I/II POLARIS program is evaluating the therapy across multiple international sites in children ranging from six months to seven years of age. The dataset presented at the ASGCT Presidential Symposium expands the emerging clinical profile of ETX101, incorporating additional patients, early readouts from the highest dose level, and longer‑term follow‑up. Across the cohort, treatment with a single intracerebroventricular dose produced a robust and dose‑dependent antiseizure effect that persisted through 52 weeks of observation. At dose level three, children experienced a median seizure…